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A Modest Proposal: Insurance Companies, Not Providers, Should Bill and Collect Deductibles and Coinsurance

Cynthia M. Roehr, CPA
Legislative Liaison for the MGMA Anesthesia Administration Assembly

Surgeries are never fun, but they are necessary. Recently my family member received excellent surgical care at our community’s surgery center. This encounter yielded ten separate provider bills. Each bill came to my home through the postal service in a separate envelope. The insurance company also mailed me “explanations of benefits” for each encounter. Thus just the postage for these mailings was nearly $10.00, and we know cost of each mailing was much more than just the postage amount. I then spent $4.40 in stamps to mail my payments to the providers. Three of these bills were for less than $10.00 each. The absurdity of this is that the money for their payment was sitting at the insurance company in my flexible spending account. Why are we wasting all of this money asking multiple care providers to communicate with and collect from the same patient? Our current process needs to change. This proposal is offered as a challenge to the current standard practices used in the healthcare industry. Currently, patient deductible and coinsurance amounts are assigned to claims as they are adjudicated by the insurance company. The collection of these amounts is then the responsibility of the care provider. I would like to propose that insurance companies hold the responsibility to bill and collect these deductibles and coinsurance amounts. This change would result in tremendous cost savings to healthcare as a whole and improved simplicity for patients.

Following are reasons to support this change:

Simplicity:

Cost Savings:

Financial Ability:

Co-Payments:

If you agree with my assessment and would like to see this change enacted, legislative action will be necessary. The insurance industry isn’t going to just capitulate and make this change. Please assist me by contacting your state and federal legislators to help me convince them of the millions of wasted administrative dollars that would be saved.


Cynthia M. Roehr, serves as Chief Administrative Officer for Linn County Anesthesiologists, PC,in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. She can be reached at: cmroehr@cr-anesthesia.com.